Shalom Chaverim!

The LSESU Israel Society is the natural home of all Israeli and Israel-curious students at LSE. We are a national, cultural and political society that celebrate all things Israel as well as encouraging serious and critical debate about the Arab-Israeli conflict. We believe in building bridges, primarily through creating dialogue that can encompasses a range of opinions, be it those with a passionate involvement in the region, or those who are simply eager to know more. This blog will serve as the logical step forwards in aiming to achieve such cooperation both from within Houghton Street and beyond. Shalom Alechem, Salaam Alaikum...Welcome!

Wednesday 14 March 2012

Escalation in Violence in Southern Israel/Gaza





The escalation of violence between Israel and Gaza is of great concern to the LSESU Israel Society. The citizens of southern Israel have been subject to a barrage of rocket fire from militants within the Gaza strip. Over 200,000 school children have spent their last few days in bomb shelters instead of attending school. The strategy of indiscriminate rocket fire puts over 1,000,000 of Israel's citizens at risk, whom Israel has a right to defend.  The Israeli Air Force has carried out airstrikes in Gaza, killing 25 Palestinians, some of whom were responsible for these attacks, but invariably there is a grave risk that an increasing number will be civilian casualties.


The false claim that only civilians have died in Gaza, and that Israel’s security is not really threatened is a worrying and harmful claim perpetuated by some members of the LSESU community. This is especially true in the knowledge that 15 of those killed were militants in the advanced stage of actualising further rocket launches.


The LSESU Israel Society mourns the effect that the escalation in conflict has on ALL civilians involved. This escalation in violence again highlights the high price that people on both sides pay for the absence of diplomatic resolution to the conflict in the region. Israeli and Palestinian leaders, along with international counterparts should do everything in their power implement a meaningful diplomatic process to bring a lasting peace.

Monday 5 March 2012

Deputy Speaker of the Knesset, Dr.Ahmad Tibi, Speaks at LSE

                                                                                             Jay Stoll

The Deputy Speaker of the Knesset, MK Dr Ahmad Tibi, spoke at an LSESU Palestine Society event this evening In Clement House, to an LSE students only event. He was accompanied by the Palestinian Ambassador to the UK.

Dr Tibi is an Arab-Israeli politician and leader of Ta'al, an Arab party in Israel.  He describes himself as Arab-Palestinian in nationality, and Israeli in citizenship. His main focus of his talk was advertised to be on how the Arab Spring had affected discourse and the realities inside of Israel, yet he instead focussed on the political status and discrimination against Arabs living in the country.

The framework of his speech was to describe the Palestinian people as a triangular structure. The base of the triangle are the occupied, the second level is the diaspora and the third is the 48 arabs inside the Green Line. He stated that without the latter, the Palestinian people would cease to be nothing like a political movement. It makes sense, considering his personal experience, that he chose to divulge on this demographic.

First he spoke of their character, stating that "In the personality of every Arab in israel there are two main components - national (part of the Arab nation) and civic component (citizens of Israel). Struggling to strengthen both elements by pushing forwards identity and character to be equal citizens."

Tibi then talked rather more empirically, citing the legislative realities behind his rhetoric on his own citizenship. "At any feat we are not equal - Apart from voting, there is a huge gap between Jewish citizens and Arab citizens"  Mentioning specifically the remits of education, infrastructure, health and agriculture as examples of "pure discrimination",  he noted that despite accounting for 20% of population, Arab-Israelis equate to only 7.5% employees in public sector. 

The next element of Dr. Tibi's speech revolved around the contradictions of the notion of a "Jewish State", a view of which he firmly believed relegated Arab citizens of Israel to a third-class status, "According to basic law, Israel is defined as Jewish and Democratic. Saying there is a pure contradiction between two values. If you are democratic you believe equal rights for all without consideration for ethnicity. But if you are defining state as ethnically jewish, you are directly saying Jews are superior. I cannot accept that. They are demanding us to accept 3rd degree citizenship."

The focus for his anger for the propagation of the 'Jewish State' undoubtedly lay with the "fascists" currently governing the most "racist Knesset of all time". Tibi emphasised the hypocrisy of those guiding citizenship legislation having only lived in the region for 30/40 years. A particular individual focus was placed upon the "chutzpah" of Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman. "He's talking about Arab citizens to recognise a 'Jewish Israel' to be deemed as loyal. We are indigenous. We did not immigrate. We were born there.He is the immigrant, talking about population transfer.. this is Israeli chutzpah."

The remainder of his talk focussed on Israel as what he perceived to be a democracy by name, but little else. He stated that the "weekly flash of racist laws against Arab minorities" meant that Israel is abiding by three kinds of rules. 

The first rule its preferential democracy for its Jewish population, which works to target Arab citizens through discriminatory laws on land purchase, amongst other things, Tibi labelled it as "an ethnocracy, Judocracy". The second 'rule': Racial Discrimination policy against the 20% Arab population contained in the same policies.The third 'rule'  he described as 'occupation and apartheid since 1967'.

He subsequently shifted his scrutiny to the international community who focus on the only the first 'rule', ergo its treatment of the 80%. The problems with this, he states, is the ignorance of a "massive violation of human rights" that should be punished. However, with a subsequent resignation, he cited the low cost, high profit nature of the Occupation as the reason for "nobody saying nothing". The control of the Jordan Valley, he said, provides almost $1bn in revenue for the Israeli government. 

On closing his address, Tibi focussed on two particular laws that he believed expressed a degree of lunacy in the oppression. One law was "against family unification - an Arab citizen of Israel who is willing to marry a Palestinian woman from the WB is totally forbidden from having her inside his house unless he is willing to leave the country." 

He stated in his capacity as Deputy-Speaker, there had been consecutive appeals against the law to no avail. "The law is being renewed year after year. Only Israel is dealing with love as a conspiracy. This kind of marriage is a real intimidation to security and threat of Israel (sic)" His next example was the 'banning of Palestinian communities from commemorating Nakba'

He then finished on a defiant, personal note. "To say they can stop us commemorating our history - we will not agree. You can bring me to court, law can not change narrative."


Dr Tibi, in full flow, in the Knesset.

We are Students, Not Governments.




                                                  Aimee Riese, LSESU Israel Society President
                                                         This is a cross-post from The Beaver

To be clear from the outset, events seen on campus on Monday were horrific. The Palestine Society protest
was disgusting. So were the water balloons thrown as a result. So was the violence towards those throwing
them. None of this should have happened. None of it should be acceptable on our campus.

It is a sad state of affairs when relations on our campus have deteriorated to this point.
It is for this reason, again, that I now openly and publicly call for members of the Palestine and Israel 
societies to dialogue.Dialogue allows activists for peace on both sides to engage and educate themselves
and others. In doing so, they become more effective in working towards their goals of peace. 
Dialogue creates understanding and it facilitates change. We are students, not governments. 
We have no restrictions on talking to one another. In fact, we have a unique opportunity 
in an academic environment to engage.

It is not unrealistic to expect graduates of the LSE to be facilitating change on an international level in the
future.Wouldn’t it be great if students had met before, not representing any government, but as students,
learning from each other?This is not the first time that dialogue has been offered.  

During Michaelmas Term, I offered to co-host an event between the Israel and Palestine Societies 
with both a Palestinian and an Israeli mother who lost their sons in the conflict. Those who were there 
witnessed the voices behind headlines, the reality of the suffering and the need for reconciliation. Those 
who were there will have also witnessed the Palestinian mother cry out, “Where are my representatives?“

I have appealed to our current Community and Welfare Officer to facilitate some sort of dialogue for our 
societies. I have met with the President of the Palestine Society and another member of their committee
to suggest ANY sort of dialogue, in ANY format, that we could jointly arrange. The Palestine Committee
again refused but suggested that a few individuals would like to participate, not under the banner of the
society. The Palestine Society has not replied to any of my messages to get in contact with those individuals.

The refusal of the Palestine Society to engage so far at any level is thoroughly depressing. 
Instead, they built a “wall” and a mock check-point, playing dress-up as Israeli soldiers.If your intention
is to raise people’s awareness of the Palestinian cause and be activists for peace, this alienated most 
students and offended many others who may otherwise join you.

I have no reason to justify engagement by presenting my own politics. As I explained, I believe
 engagement is valuable in itself. However, I feel that by revealing a little more about my own views, this 
may challenge the assumptions of members of the Palestine Society and the general reader. 
I have interned for Peace Now, the largest Israeli peace movement, continually critical of the 
government, and also for B’Tselem, the Israeli human rights organisation
monitoring Israeli human rights abuses in the Occupied Territories.

I want to emphasise again that it is not because of my views that you should talk to me (indeed, many in the
Israel Society would not support the work of these organisations) but I hope this challenges the perceptions
that may (or may not) have been formed by not talking. It is precisely because of our differing views, 
both between the Israel and 
Palestine Societies and within them, that will challenge and educate all of us involved.

Moreover, this has moved beyond solely education. It has now entered the realms of good 
campus relations. It is worth emphasizing again how offensive the protest on Monday was. It presented
 the conflict in black and white, right and wrong. At a basic level, the depiction of a “wall” for the sole 
purpose of separation fails to recognise the reality.The purpose of this security structure is to directly 
prevent terrorism in Israel and the statistical evidence shows it has done so. Terror has affected members
of the Israel Society. 

It is hard to express how offensive the laughter and attitudes of the protestors in carrying out their 
protest was to these members. 

The Israel Society still believes that dialogue is the best way forward. It is the only way to handle 
tensions on campus. These tensions are real and grounded in experiences. I am sincerely appealing to 
members of the Palestine Society, both as supporters of the Palestinian cause and as students of the LSE, 
to talk to members of the Israel Society.

Wednesday 22 February 2012

This Thursday: Tal Becker Speaks for LSESU Israel Society

 
 
LSESU Israel Society hosts Dr Tal Becker:

Dr. Tal Becker is a fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute, an International Associate at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and a member of the Hartman Institute's Engaging Israel Project.

From 2006-2009 he served as... senior policy advisor to Israel's Minister of Foreign Affairs and was a lead negotiator in Israeli-Palestinian negotiations during the Annapolis peace process.

He has represented Israel in a wide variety of bilateral and multilateral negotiations, and served as director of the International Law Department at the Israeli Foreign Ministry, as counsel to Israel's UN Mission in New York, and as an international law expert in the Military Advocate General's Corps of the Israel Defense Forces.

Dr. Becker holds a doctorate from Columbia University, lectures widely throughout Israel and overseas, and is the recipient of numerous scholarly awards.

His book, Terrorism and the State: Rethinking the Rules of State Responsibility, is the recipient of the 2007 Guggenheim Prize for Best International Law Book. He is co-author of a forthcoming textbook on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.


LSE, Old Building, 3.28

18:00

The Israeli Institute of Technology comes to The LSE



LSESU Israel Society are delighted to host Professor Boaz Golany, the Vice President for External Relations and Resource Development and the incumbent of the Samuel Gorney Chair in Engineering at Technion - Israel Institute of Technology.
This is a unique chance to hear about the Technion and Israeli Technology. In light of recent SU meetings, we invite all students to come and listen and discuss.


Register for tickets here: https://www2.lse.ac.uk/publicEvents/internal/20120227_InternalEvent.aspx


LSE students and staff can request one ticket via the online ticket request form which will be live on this listing from shortly after 10pm on Tuesday 21 February till at least 12noon on Wednesday 22 February.


Professor Boaz Golany is the Vice President for External Relations and Resource Development and the incumbent of the Samuel Gorney Chair in Engineering at Technion - Israel Institute of Technology. Since 1986, he has been a faculty member at the William Davidson Faculty of Industrial Engineering and Management, serving as Associate Dean for Teaching (1994-1999) and as Dean (2006-2011). He holds a BSc (Summa Cum Laude) in Industrial Engineering and Management from the Technion (1982), and a PhD from the School of Business at the University of Texas at Austin (1985).

Professor Golany has served as an Area Editor and member of the Editorial Board for the Journal of Productivity Analysis, IIE Transactions, Omega, and Operations Research. Professor Golany has published over 80 papers in refereed journals and over 15 book chapters. His publications are in the areas of Industrial Engineering, Operations Research, and Management Science. In recent years he has also addressed issues of homeland security and counterterrorism. He has supervised over 40 graduate students, some of whom now serve as faculty in Israeli universities and colleges.

Professor Golany has served as a consultant to numerous companies and agencies in Israel and the USA. These include government agencies, energy companies, and companies in the financial sector, manufacturing, services, and information technologies.

Monday 20 February 2012

LSESU Israel Society Statement on "Apartheid" Week events.

LSESU Israel Society Statement
20th February 2012


LSESU Israel Society condemns all violence that was seen today. Jewish students were attacked by Palestine Society protestors in response to water balloons thrown at their mock "wall".

This “wall” was erected on Houghton Street during an 'Israel Apartheid Week' demonstration, which was the LSESU Palestine Society’s interpretation of an Israeli checkpoint. The situation was intimidating for Jewish students as they held oversized guns, called Jewish students 'Israelis' as they walked through and the protests further angered students who have been directly affected by the conflict.

As a counter protest, some Jewish students threw water balloons at the wall. They did not intend for these to hit any students and apologise on their own behalf if they did.



The students who threw water balloons were not part of an official LSESU Israel Society protest Their actions were not sanctioned by the society. 


In response to this, Jewish students were rushed at and attacked by Palestine Society demonstrators, leaving one Jewish student injured. 

Provocative acts instigated by the Palestine Society today only serve to fuel tensions on campus. Dragging women kicking and screaming along the floor, as the Palestine Society simulated, is not an accurate description of reality; rather it is a disgusting simplification of a complex situation for both sides.

Events such as these only leave Jewish and Israeli students feeling targeted and intimidated on campus. Campus should be a safe space for all students and thus no physical force of any kind should not be tolerated.

The LSESU Israel Society is hosting three events this week, we encourage students to come and engage in constructive dialogue instead of symbolic gesturing that harms students' welfare.

We also call on the School and the LSESU to restore calm to campus and encourage dialogue. We look forward to a full apology for the provocative nature of today's event and the physical actions which followed from certain members of the Palestine society.

Friday 6 January 2012

NUS Support the Boycott of Veolia and Eden.


It is hugely disappointing that NUS has decided to endorse of the Boycott Divestment and Sanctions campaign. The LSE Israel Society strongly believes that BDS is not only counterproductive, but a hindrance to the Union's recent support of a two state solution. 

Furthermore, we believe it is a complete betrayal of NUS President Liam Burns' claim at the UJS National Conference that NUS works to facilitate dialogue on the conflict, with BDS being the polar opposite.

Below are 6 plainly put reasons, presented by Professor Naomi Chazan of the New Israel Fund at a speech in Sydney. As someone on the left, she can hardly be described as a "hawk". Quite glaringly obvious wisdom is to be found in her logic. We hope this provides a pause for thought for the hierarchy of NUS 

"The aim of the BDS is to purportedly bring Israel to end its occupation of the territories conquered in 1967 and bring it to the negotiating table.

But I will give you six arguments why it probably does precisely the opposite:
·     First, it is ineffective. BDS is not affecting the Israeli economy. Israel’s economy is burgeoning, and many envy us for how we got through the GFC [Great Financial Crisis] without experiencing the GFC. If at all the BDS is adversely affecting working-class people. The last people in Israel who should be victims of BDS – the workers – are the first to be affected.
·     Second, the global BDS, because it is directed against Israel and all Israelis, indirectly or directly undermines the very existence of the state of Israel. To question the existence of Israel is akin to calling for the elimination of Israel. Sometimes it’s a codeword for a one-state solution, which denies the right of Israel and Jews to self-determination. I have no suicidal tendencies whatsoever. I will not be party to my own self-destruction. I have one passport – an Israeli passport – and I intend to keep it and am perfectly happy for our borders to shrink substantially to do so.
·     Third, BDS has become counterproductive. It strengthens those Israelis who really believe that the entire world is against us. I come from a country that is very strong but is guided by a victim mentality. Every day that the BDS movement exists, it is strengthening the right wing and extremist forces in Israel. In Israel we call it a boomerang!
·     Fourth, if anybody suffers today from BDS, it is the already-weakened left in Israel – precisely the progressive forces we want to fortify. The BDS movement has been used as an excuse to carry out a series of witch-hunts against progressive forces in Israel, and against me personally, and it is tremendously damaging for those Israelis who have been carrying out the struggle for a Palestinian state alongside Israel.
·     Fifth, the most offensive part of the BDS movement is that it has been directed against academics. Israeli academics have been singled out, not invited to conferences, their articles rejected in major journals, because they are Israeli, not because of the content. The vast majority of academics are peaceniks and progressive. You are doing the work of the Israeli far right. As an academic, there is one haven of real debate and that’s in academic circles; supporting BDS goes against the grain of academic freedom.
·     Finally, the most important point, though I don’t know if it’s the most significant. Look how much energy we are expending, even in Australia. I understand there were pitched battles on the subject in Sydney! If someone wanted to invent a diversion, BDS is it.
If you care about a just peace in the Middle East, expend all your energy bringing it about and not arguing about the method. The time has come to realise a viable Palestinian state alongside Israel for the benefit of both peoples.
"